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Ban giám khảo 14

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1 Sam-sôn đi xuống Thim-na, thấy một người nữ trong vòng con gái Phi-li-tin.

2 Người đã trở lên, thuật điều đó cho cha mẹ mình, mà rằng: Con có thấy tại Thim-ma một người nữ trong vòng con gái Phi-li-tin; bây giờ xin hãy hỏi nàng cưới cho con.

3 Cha mẹ người nói rằng: Trong vòng các con gái của anh em con và trong cả dân sự chúng ta, há chẳng có người nữ nào, mà con phải đi cưới vợ nơi dân Phi-li-tin chẳng chịu cắt bì đó sao? Sam-sôn đáp cùng cha rằng: Xin cha hãy cưới nàng đó cho con, vì nó đẹp mắt con.

4 Vả, cha mẹ người chẳng rõ điều đó bởi nơi Ðức Giê-hô-va mà đến; vì người tìm dịp tranh đấu cùng dân Phi-li-tin. Lúc bấy giờ dân Phi-li-tin quản hạt Y-sơ-ra-ên.

5 Sam-sôn đi xuống Thim-na với cha mẹ mình; khi đến vườn nho Thim-na, thấy một con sư tử tơ đến đón gầm hét.

6 Thần của Ðức Giê-hô-va cảm động Sam-sôn rất mạnh, tuy chẳng cầm vật chi, song người con sư tử đó như con dê con vậy. Nhưng người chẳng thuật lại cho cha mẹ hay điều mình đã làm.

7 Vậy, người đi xuống, nói cùng người nữ, người nữ đẹp lòng Sam-sôn.

8 Sau một ít lâu, người trở lại đặng cưới nàng; đi vòng lại xem cái thây sư tử, thấy trong xác nó có một đoàn ong và mật.

9 Người bụm mật trong tay, vừa ăn vừa đi. Ðến gần cha mẹ, người đưa cho cha mẹ ăn, nhưng chẳng thuật lại rằng mình đã thấy mật đó trong thây sư tử.

10 Cha người đi xuống nhà người nữ ấy, và tại đó Sam-sôn bày ra một tiệc. Ấy là thường tục của các gã thanh niên hay làm.

11 Vừa thấy chàng, người ta bèn mời ba mươi gã thanh niên để kết bạn cùng chàng.

12 Sam-sôn nói: Tôi sẽ ra cho anh em một câu đố; nếu trong bảy ngày tiệc, anh em giải nó ra, thì tôi sẽ thưởng anh em ba mươi cái áo trong và ba mươi bộ áo lễ;

13 còn nếu anh em không giải nó ra được, thì anh em phải nộp cho tôi ba mươi cái áo trong, và ba mươi bộ áo lễ. Chúng đáp rằng: Hãy ra câu đố anh cho chúng tôi nghe.

14 Vậy, chàng ra cho chúng rằng: Của ăn từ giống ăn mà ra; vật ngọt từ giống mạnh mà ra. Trong ba ngày chúng không giải được câu đố.

15 Ðến ngày thứ bảy, chúng nói cùng vợ Sam-sôn rằng: Hãy dụ chồng nàng giải đáp câu đố cho chúng ta; bằng chẳng, chúng ta sẽ đốt nàng và nhà cha nàng. Có phải để bóc lột chúng ta mà các ngươi thỉnh chúng ta chăng?

16 Vợ Sam-sôn khóc trước mặt người mà rằng: Quả thật, chàng ghét tôi, chẳng thương tôi chút nào: chàng đã ra một câu đố cho người dân sự tôi, mà không có giải nghĩa cho tôi. Người đáp: Kìa, ta không có giải nghĩa cho cha mẹ ta thay, mà ta lại phải, mà ta lại giải nghĩa cho nàng sao?

17 Trong bảy ngày ăn tiệc nàng cứ khóc như vậy trước mặt người. Qua ngày thứ bảy, người giải nghĩa cho nàng, bởi vì nàng làm cực lòng người. Ðoạn, nàng giải lại cho người dân sự mình.

18 Vậy, ngày thứ bảy, trước khi mặt trời lặn, người trong thành đến nói cùng chàng rằng: Có gì ngọt hơn mật, có chi mạnh hơn sư tử? Sam-sôn bèn đáp: Nếu các ngươi không cày ruộng bằng bò cái tơ ta, thì các ngươi không giải được câu đố ta.

19 Bấy giờ Thần của Ðức Giê-hô-va cảm động người; người đi xuống Ách-ca-lôn, giết ba mươi người, cướp lấy áo xống của chúng nó, thưởng cho những người giải được câu đố; đoạn, người nổi giận phừng phừng trở về nhà cha mình.

20 Vợ Sam-sôn bị gả cho một người trai trẻ mà chàng đã chọn làm bạn.

   

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Exploring the Meaning of Judges 14

Napsal(a) New Christian Bible Study Staff, Julian Duckworth

Judges 14: Samson’s Philistine wife.

At the time of Samson, the Philistines were fiercely oppressing Israel. The Philistines lived on the coast, and they may well have come from overseas. They lived in the region for about 600 years, and the Old Testament refers to many later conflicts with the Philistines.

One day, Samson saw a young Philistine woman in Timnath, and he asked his parents to get her for his wife. They asked why he did not choose an Israelite woman, but he insisted on marrying the woman he saw in Timnath, so they all went to meet her. On the way, Samson was attacked by a lion, and he tore it apart with his bare hands. After some time, when he passed by the same place, there was a swarm of bees and honey inside the lion’s carcass. He ate some of the honey, and even brought some of it to his parents, but he did not tell them where it came from.

The woman pleased Samson, and he arranged a feast to which thirty companions were invited. At the feast, Samson told them a riddle: “Out of the eater came something to eat, out of the strong came something sweet.” He said that if they solved the riddle in the seven days of the feast, he would give them thirty linen sheets and thirty changes of clothing. If not, they were to give him the same. They could not solve the riddle for three days, so they convinced Samson’s wife to beg him for the answer. At the end of seven days, the men answered Samson’s riddle, and he was furious.

Then the Lord’s spirit came upon Samson, and he killed thirty Philistine men from Ashkelon, took their garments, and gave these to the thirty men at the feast. His wife was given to his companion.

*****

The spiritual meaning of the powerful Philistines is believing faith is all-important, and does not require charity or good works in life — a fundamental spiritual error. This way of thinking is called ‘faith alone’ spirituality, and it can take many forms. The proximity of the Philistines to Israel is also significant, as it suggests that the temptation to prefer faith without considering charity is never far away (see Swedenborg’s work, True Christian Religion 200[3]).

The pursuit of a Philistine wife reflects the alluring nature of faith without charity, an easy, complacent spirituality. The young lion represents the force of faith alone to hold us in its grip. The honey stands for the spiritual sweetness following regeneration, as we use our faith to expand our hearts and minds (see Swedenborg’s work, Arcana Caelestia 5620[1]).

Samson’s riddle stands for the puzzling nature of the Word’s teachings to those living by faith alone. The number thirty stands for what is whole, in this instance, the completely opposing nature of faith alone and true spiritual living. The linen sheets and changes of clothing mean taking up a genuine spiritual life which involves repentance, living the by the Word, and acknowledging the Lord. Linen is the material of a priest’s robes, and stands for the highest spiritual truths (Arcana Caelestia 5319[7]).

This end of this story shows us that faith alone doubles back on itself, and leads to a completely external understanding of the Lord. This is seen in taking garments from the thirty dead Philistines and giving them to the Philistines from the feast. Samson’s wife, who was given to his Philistine companion, stands for the complete divide between faith alone and love for the Lord. Samson’s apparent anger is really the zeal of protecting the nature of true spiritual life, which comes from the Lord (see Swedenborg’s work, Apocalypse Revealed 365).

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Arcana Coelestia # 2762

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2762. The origin of 'a horse' meaning the understanding part of the mind lies nowhere else than in representatives in the next life. Frequently there, in the world of spirits, horses which display great variety are seen, and also people seated on horses. And whenever they are seen the understanding is meant by them. Such representatives are of constant occurrence among spirits. It is because the horse is a representative of the understanding that when horses are mentioned in the Word the spirits and angels present with man know instantaneously that it is the understanding which is being spoken of. It is also why, when spirits from some other planet who have been endowed with intelligence and wisdom are raised up from the world of spirits into heaven, horses shining as though they consisted of fire appear, which I also have seen when those people were carried up.

[2] This experience has made clear to me what is meant by the fiery chariot and the fiery horses which Elisha saw when Elijah went up with the whirlwind into heaven, and what also by Elisha's shout at that time,

My father, my father, the chariot of Israel, and its riders. 2 Kings 2:11-12, and by the same spoken by Joash king of Israel to Elisha when the latter was dying,

My father, my father, the chariot of Israel, and its riders. 2 Kings 13:14.

In the Lord's Divine mercy it will be shown elsewhere that Elijah and Elisha represented the Lord as to the Word. That is to say, it will there be shown that the doctrine of love and charity drawn from the Word is meant by 'the fiery chariot', and the doctrine of faith deriving from these by 'the fiery horses'. The doctrine of faith is the same as an understanding of the Word as to its inner content, which is the internal sense.

[3] As regards chariots and horses being seen in heaven among spirits and angels, this is evident not only from the fact that they were seen by the prophets, such as by Zechariah (1:8-10; 6:1-7) and by others, but also by Elisha's servant, of whom the following is said in the Book of Kings,

Jehovah opened the eyes of Elisha's servant, and he saw; and behold the mountain was full of horses, and there were fiery chariots surrounding Elisha. 2 Kings 6:17.

Furthermore, where the intelligent and wise dwell in the world of spirits, chariots and horses are constantly making their appearance, the reason being, as has been stated, that chariots and horses represent the things that belong to wisdom and intelligence. People who have been awakened after death and are entering the next life see represented to them a young man seated on a horse, who then dismounts. The meaning of this is that before they can enter heaven they have to be furnished with cognitions of good and truth - see Volume One, in 187, 188. The fact that chariots and horses meant those things was fully known in the Ancient Church, as becomes clear also from the Book of Job, a book of the Ancient Church, where these words occur,

God has made him forget wisdom and given him no share in intelligence. After raising himself on high he laughs at the horse and its rider. Job 39:17-19.

[4] The meaning of 'a horse' as the understanding spread from the Ancient Church to the wise in surrounding regions, and even into Greece. As a consequence of this, when describing the sun, which meant love, 2441, 2495, they placed the god of their wisdom and intelligence there in the sun, and gave him a chariot and four fiery horses. And when they described the god of the sea - the sea meaning knowledge in general, 28, 2120 - they gave horses to him also. And when they described the upsurge of knowledge from the understanding they portrayed it as a flying horse which with its hoof broke open a fountain where the virgins who were the branches of knowledge dwelt. And by the Trojan horse nothing else was meant than a device of their understanding for destroying city walls. Even today, when the understanding is being described, it is quite usual, drawing on the custom received from those people of old, to portray the understanding as a flying horse or Pegasus, and to portray learning as a fountain. Yet scarcely anyone knows that 'a horse' in the mystical sense means the understanding, and 'a fountain' truth, let alone that those images with a spiritual meaning spread to the gentiles from the Ancient Church.

  
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Thanks to the Swedenborg Society for the permission to use this translation.